Posted: 26 August 2005 at 2:29am | IP Logged | 10
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John Mietus wrote:
It's not about the variety, it's about the dwindling readership and subsequent decrease in sales. The number of sales of a book that was on the chopping block twenty-five to thirty years ago was a solid seller ten- fifteen years ago, and now is considered a hit. What does that tell you? |
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That comics are following the same trend as TV. Shows which are considered huge hits today bring in numbers which would have gotten shows in prior eras cancelled.
We no longer live in a mass market culture. We live in a niche market culture. The sales numbers of yesteryear are never, ever coming back because that kind of broad appeal is impossible in a world with this degree of media fragmentation. The audience is more heterogenous and more demanding. They want things that cater specifically to their niche tastes, and if you don't provide it to them, someone else will.
The comics industry, like virtually all other branches of the media, is a niche industry. It shouldn't pretend it can be anything else. Rather, it should look at becoming a stronger, healthier niche.
Right now, the problem is not that it's a niche, but that it's in a bad niche. The audience is aging, and new customers aren't able to get in because of the direct sales system. Superheroes dominate too much of the market, and as a result there's not enough diversity in genre.
Eric Kleefeld wrote:
The manga format is the way to go in the American market. I feel confident in saying this because I don't feel I'm describing some future trend, but simply the present one. |
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Agreed. People are talking about this like there isn't a successful comics market in the US to emulate, but there is. Just look at what Tokyopop's doing and work from there.
To whit: digest-size books featuring new (to American audiences, anyway) characters, sold through bookstores. Perhaps promoted through free online webcomics or as tie-ins with cartoons or toys. Digest-sized books are convenient and reasonably priced.
Another possibility is something like an anthology magazine, that runs comics along with pop culture magazine content: music reviews, articles on videogames, celebrity interviews, etc. The magazine format would get it into bookstores and newsstands, the non-comics content would draw in new readers, advertising in the magazine would subsidize the production expenses, and then the comics could be collected in digests or TPBs.
Spinner racks in Wal-Mart might look promising, but they're not. Even if you were to downgrade the paper stock, monthly comics would still be overpriced. Also, Wal-Mart's content restrictions would kill any moves towards diversity, and leave the books too tepid to appeal to young people. You'd end up with the same problem the music industry has now: no one wants to buy the new 50 Cent CD at Wal-Mart, because it's overpriced and they only have the "clean" version. Why spend too much for the neutered version when you can go online and download the "dirty" version for free, along with a bunch of other stuff Wal-Mart would never carry?
Spinner racks at Wal-Mart are probably the best option for monthlies, but they're still not that good. Consequently, I don't think the monthly comic as a format has much of a future.
Joe Zhang wrote:
Like they say , the grass looks always looks greener on the other side. I've been told that Japanese Manga studios face horrendous challenges trying to survive. |
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Every company faces horrendous challenges trying to survive these days. It's a competitive world. Also, while individual manga studios may have trouble surviving, the industry as a whole is flourishing with large, healthy readership. Hell, the manga industry is doing better in the US than the domestic comics industry.
Trevor Giberson wrote:
Does 50 Cent sings the same lyrics than Marvin Gaye ?
If I hook you up with a few good modern soul singers who do it old-school, would you hook me with up the names of a few modern super-hero books that do it the way Stan Lee used to? |
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I think you're missing his point. What would have been considered "adult" or "edgy" thirty years ago is pretty tame now. Yes, there are modern soul-singers who sing like Marvin Gaye, but they don't appeal to young audiences the way someone like 50 Cent does. They appeal to older aficionados in a niche market - which is basically what fans like us have become.
Let's face it: the current roster of superhero characters at the Big Two has been largely untouched in the past thirty years, and most of the people who want to read traditional superhero stories like those from the Silver Age are old and getting older. New media like manga, video games, television cartoons, webcomics, etc. are giving young people what they want and are distributed in ways that allow those young people to get them.
What about the characters we know and love? Many have pointed out that Spider-Man must appeal to something in young people, because the Spider-Man movies are so successful. Likewise the Teen Titans and JLU cartoons. But Peter David recently posted this in his blog, and I think he's got a point:
"I was at a playground yesterday with Caroline. There was a little boy there, seven years old, named Steven. He was talking to other kids about Spider-Man, and what a big Spider-Man fan he was. He was showing off his Spidey sneakers very proudly.
And I said to him, "Do you read Spider-Man comics?"
He looked at me oddly and said, "No."
"Why not?"
"I watch the movies," he said. "And I play the video game. I beat Doc Ock," he added proudly.
"Okay, but...Spider-Man's a comic book character. Aren't you at all interested in reading the comic?"
He shook his head. His ten year old brother said, "Why should he?"
I said, "Well, because you keep watching the movies, it's the same story. What about new adventures, new stories about Spider-Man?"
The big brother shrugged and said, "He watches the cartoon."
"I watch the cartoon," Steve echoed. "And the movies. And play the game. I'm a Spider-Man fan!"
Spidey's biggest fan...except for, y'know, the whole comic book thing. That he really doesn't care about.
And why should he? How many have you, in the past five years, have seen a James Bond movie or played the video game? Now...how many of you have read a James Bond book? Seen a Sherlock Holmes film or a repeat of the Jeremy Brett TV series? As opposed to reading Conan Doyle or any of the many pastiches?
Comics used to be the only venue for following the adventures of iconic heroes, just as books were once the only means of keeping up with literary heroes. And now the heros' popularity has outstripped any need for literature...or readers.
And you wonder why comics are hemorrhaging readers."
I think we need to stop thinking of "the industry" as being primarily in the business of publishing monthly comics. The industry manages a number of pop culture properties, and they should look at them as whole franchises working synergistically, instead of looking at one medium as being the promotional vehicle for another.
I think there need to be a lot of new characters, new genres, new everything, to appeal to young audiences, and that needs to be coupled with a new understanding of existing characters which takes non-comics media seriously.
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